You know how marketers stress on word-of-mouth? Well, backlinks is a kind of marketing technique based around the same concept. You need backlinks from relevant websites with a high domain authority to rank you better on renowned search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing.
The task to get inbound links has become ever so difficult for the following main reasons:
As a content developer and marketer, you need to keep yourself updated about what’s happening and what you shouldn’t do in the world of search engine optimization (SEO). The number of valuable backlinks determines a websites ranking on search engines so work strategically and cleverly.
Rand Fishkin, founder of Moz, shares that visual assets give people the opportunity to garner links and references by different media outlets because “they’re simple to consume, to understand, and they’re useful and usable” in various ways.
Although Fishkin isn’t a fan of infographics, this visual data representation practice is used extensively by businesses and individuals to grab rewarding inbound links to improve the popularity of their website and/or blog.
Guestographics, as described by Brian Dean of Backlinko, is a great way to get online media and influencers talk about you.
But hold on a minute.
You may make the infographic yourself or take the help of a professional infographic designer, the core idea is to share worthwhile content not something crappy and cliché.
Here are ways to use infographics to foster your search rankings:
90% of the success of your infographic design depends on the topic you choose. Just another day my colleague was shocked over an infographic to had over a hundred thousand pins. It was an ultra-minimal design with nothing spectacular but it worked! It is because of the content. So make sure the title and text you write are well-researched, trending, and aim to solve people’s problems.
Takeaway: A catchy title, problem-solving information and industry facts trigger audience interest.
Structure the content in a harmonizing and creative way. The composition of information on an infographic helps the audience easily follow the hierarchy of design and understand the content. This makes your infographic viral and top publishers pick your creation for their websites to pull traffic for them of course, and for you by crediting content creators and providing links leading to mostly your blog or social media accounts.
Takeaway: Make an interactive infographic design but make sure the file size is shareable.
Embed code lets people pick your infographic from your website and put it on theirs. The best part is that the infographic will be always be linked to your web page as it includes post URL, image URL, and image alt text with the appropriate keyword. It is a powerful and helpful link-building code that anyone can easily paste in their web page’s HTML.
Takeaway: Keywords enhance the embed code so make sure you use them wisely.
In case you’ve done everything to make your infographic shareable yet you’re not getting enough valuable backlinks, then pitch your infographic to top content-sharing blogs and websites (SlideShare and Visually) that cater to your niche. Adrienne Erin’s advice on pitching is similar to Dean’s: define the value proposition of your infographic to fit the needs of the blogger, marketer or editor.
Takeaway: Personalize your pitch! Make it sound humanizing and not an automatic robotic action.
It is important to have a variety of backlinks from article directories and RSS to social and video. Google loves such diversity. According to a whitepaper by Cisco, “video traffic will be 82% of all consumer Internet traffic by 2020, up from 70% in 2015.” Undoubtedly, video is a type of content with the highest return on investment in terms of online success via inlinks to increase organic search traffic.
Viral content is catchy and spreads like fire on the internet. From a music video like Gangnam Style to an infographic about graphic design, anything can become viral as long as you develop creative content people want to share. These are the types of things that people on the internet enjoy reading and referring to others.
Tutorial, i.e. “how to” or “explainer” videos are high in demand, which is why businesses are investing in designing videos that solve a problem. You can either make videos using illustrations or humanize it with voice-over or real people. Such videos have a chance to be picked by writers and marketers to add value to the content and in return, they add the source of the video to their posts, which is your web page.
Several marketing agencies and startup support organizations use webinars to engage the audience and invite people to their content. This is great when you want to build public relations. The presentation, lecture or workshop you conduct is often covered by news publishers online, and this way you can get credible backlinks. In fact, journalists and bloggers are always on the look for current events (stories) for coverage.
Technically, websites with high domain authorities pick content that is very famous or that has the potential to become popular among users. 72 percent of B2B buyers cherish case studies because they’re an account of brand, business or individual experiences and target audiences can relate to it. Visual storytelling is an empathetic and powerful way to attract views and get noticed by bloggers for backlinks.
Vinay Patankar, CEO of Process Street, suggests that marketers have an added advantage by uploading their videos on YouTube since the platform is owned by the search engine giant Google.
When you set up an account on YouTube and upload videos, you get plenty of options to optimize your video.
You can include buttons linking to your social media and landing page on your “My Channel” page.
Other great video sharing websites that can get you inward links include Vimeo, Reddit, Tumblr, Instructables and of course Facebook. However, I feel YouTube wins the race when you want to build backlinks.
All kinds of images speak a thousand words but some hit the right spot, especially when it comes to backlinks. FYI, I’m not referring to the gazillion cat, dog and panda images that went viral. Nope. I am talking about images that add value to a blog postor a social media post.
These include:
An award-winning digital marketing consultant, Mathew Barby describes three ways to get backlinks with images. He calls images an “SEO goldmine” and says they’re the best “as far as linkable content goes”. So let’s dig into some of his strategies for inbound links I find useful.
Write guest posts for authoritative websites and add linkable images. Be careful! Some sites don’t allow you to link images directly to your sales page. In this scenario, you can add links leading to your relevant blog posts.
This is a productive task as Barby defines. You look for websites that use your custom and copyrighted images and ask the site to give you credit with a link. You may assume this to be a painstaking challenge but it isn’t. You can use this reverse image search tool for Google. I’ve tried and it isn’t bad.
You could run “blog awards” or a resource page where you list the top companies or blogs that fall under your niche. Then you create custom badges for each of them and send them with a link to your blog post. This is almost like a souvenir that webmasters can add on their web pages with a link to your source where you’ve bragged about them.
If you make custom images, then you can pitch them to bloggers asking to give you credit with a link for it. Explore different industries that relate to your business, find their top writers or marketers and type them an email. Don’t advertise; instead tell them how your image will work for them.
Also Explore: Why SEO Is Important For Bringing Traffic To Your Website
I think this is perhaps the most basic and easiest way to get valuable and targeted backlinks. Loren Baker explains why social bookmarking is an awesome way to generate traffic and garner valuable inbound links to your website. Services like StumbleUpon, Delicious, Flikr, Reddit, Digg help search engines in many ways:
This is great news for your visual content. If your written blog articles with infographics, videos, and images get bookmarked, then your traffic will definitely boost, and the chance to rank higher in SERPs will increase.
The breaking point is you need engagement for all the above tips to work for you! You have to constantly be in the thread of social media platforms, interacting with content-sharing websites, bloggers and reporters. Make sure you never forget to constantly stay in touch with your industry influencers and thought leaders. So when you publish anything, share content or submit it, you have relationships that can benefit you.
At the end, I’d just like to point out, getting inbound links is a gradual process. It is both time and effort-intensive because you take your audience somewhere else and redirect them to your landing pages or blog through a well-planned journey.
Which super tip will you use first?
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But I read social bookmarking backlink technique is old now. If you submit your article to low level site then your spam score auto increase
Hey Awais! How are you doing? Well, spam can happen anywhere to be honest. You have to use the social bookmarking technique wisely. For example, if you bookmark your infographic on StumbleUpon then make sure you bookmark other's content as well (relevant to your industry or interest). If you bookmark one piece of content of yours then wait for some days to bookmark another. Also, you can use domain checkers to make sure the bookmarking site you're sharing to is good. Hope that clears things.